4-1- THE, NE.' ¥ORIER IS .,. something HE satisfaction of a clean, smooth shave can't be put into a picture, nor accounted for by words. It's something you learn about b actual ex- perience. That's why we ask you to tW Fougere Royale Shaving Cream, instead of telling you how well it does its work. You will learn how quick and easy, smooth and invig- orating a shave can be only when you get FougereRoyale on your own brush. Get it at your druggist s, or send a dime for enough for ten good shaves. Two TODAY and AND THEN I FOR- GOT. Miniature earthquakes by the Little Ramblers. (Columbia) SOMEONE IS LOSlN' SUSAN ad CALLING ME HOME. Yes, sir, that's Ben Bernie. (Brunswick) WHO WOULDNLI'.  and How MANY TIMES? Last call on "How Many Times?" too. The Hotel Astor Orchestra glides sveltely this Berlin air, which has a bright new partner in another Donaldson hit. (Okeh) R. A. S. INTERMEZZO OWNTOWN Broadway was quiet, singularly quiet. The rent business thoroughfare of the largest city in the United States looked as if it were a lane in Sleepy Hollow. Business was entirely suspended. A hush was over every- thing. Even the occasional cars that rumbled by and the taxicabs that chugged along reflected the idyllic calm. And yet it was a week day. No national, state, municipal or borough holiday had been proclaimed. How. then, did the heart of the metropolis happen to lose a beat? Was it a miracle ? No, gentle and mayhap gentile reader, it was Yam Kippur. E. L. ,IE YoU A NEW YOIKEI ? TEN EASY QUESTIONS THAT WILL HELP YOU TO KNOW. THE ANSWERS ARE PRINTED ON PAGE 64. lWhen did Wall Street lose its wall? 2What famous rendezvous orig- inally occupied the present site of the Plaza Hotel? 3Why are there lights in front of the mayor's house ? 4How many living ex-mayors has New York? 5Who planted the only haw- thorn tree in Central Park, and where is it? 6What famous author was born in William Street? 7What are New York's two best known Chinese theatres, and where are they? 8Why is Waverly Place so named? 9What is the fountain at the Plaza called? 10What do the arrows on the walks at Central Park mean? Wear Sabots? Here's a stylish sabot Whittled out of wood, A Flemish dame would grab it While the grabbing's good; For quickly would she lamp Its unusual appeal, With its kiln-dried vamp And its steam-cured heel, With the arch end-grained Where it's chiseled out below, With its sole well-planed And its band-sawn toe. We were recently amaze:l to learn, from sources of unquestionable authenticity, that more wooden shoes are worn today in these our progressive United States than in all the kingdom of Holland. Alert as we are to all business opportuni- ties, we immediately saw in this fact a marvellous opportunity for increasing our sales. Among all these millions of sabot-wearers, said we to ourselves, surely there must be hundreds of thou- sands who read The New Yorker--let's try to sell "era Arch Preservers. So now then thereforedo YOU wear wooden shoes? If you do, you are simply ruining your arches. Nature formed a certain curve in the bottom of the human foot, and a sabot-soled shoe, by forcing the Izottom out of this curve sooner or later breaks down the delicate architecture o bone that is intended to support the weight of the body. If you don't wear wooden shoes, it's just the same. Practically all shoes are wooden in this respect. So come in for a pair of Arch Preservers, anyway. You'll be thankful for the relief. TO COME TO CASES-- THE SUNNA A two.strap model for street wear Black and tan calf and suede 590 FIFTH AVENU1LNEW YORK_., ARCH PRESERVER SHOES EXCLUSIVELY JAEGER BUILDING--FOURTH FLOOR At 48th Street Where the bus stops going South